Title :
Low-power motion vector estimation using iterative search block-matching methods and a high-speed non-destructive CMOS image sensor
Author :
Kawahito, Shoji ; Handoko, Dwi ; Tadokoro, Yoshiaki ; Matsuzawa, Akira
Author_Institution :
Res. Inst. of Electron., Shizuoka Univ., Hamamatsu, Japan
fDate :
12/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
In this paper, motion vector (MV) estimation methods with high-speed intermediate pictures for low-power video compression are proposed. The intermediate pictures are obtained by a special type of CMOS image sensor. An adaptive iterative-search block matching is proposed to obtain precise MVs of video-rate pictures from high-speed intermediate pictures with the reduced computational complexity. The sensor captures high-speed intermediate pictures without destructing signal charge and video-rate pictures with full signal accumulation time. The proposed active pixel sensor using bidirectional multiple charge transfer is useful for the nondestructive intermediate imaging with a reduced fixed pattern noise. The image sensor chip has been implemented by using 0.35-μm CMOS technology. It operates with 3.3 V and captures 480 frames/s high-speed nondestructive intermediate pictures and 30 frame/s fully accumulated video-rate pictures. The proposed adaptive iterative-search block matching has a comparable precision to a full search block matching with reduction of computational complexity by a factor of about 1/13, on average. It also reduces the data-loading rate from the memory by a factor of about 1/4.
Keywords :
CMOS image sensors; computational complexity; data compression; image matching; image sequences; iterative methods; motion estimation; video coding; 0.35 micron; 3.3 V; CMOS technology; active pixel sensor; adaptive iterative-search block matching; bidirectional multiple charge transfer; computational complexity reduction; data-loading rate; high-speed image sensor; high-speed intermediate pictures; image sensor chip; image sequence; low-power motion vector estimation; low-power video compression; nondestructive CMOS image sensor; nondestructive intermediate imaging; reduced fixed pattern noise; signal accumulation time; Active noise reduction; CMOS image sensors; CMOS technology; Charge transfer; Charge-coupled image sensors; Computational complexity; Iterative methods; Motion estimation; Pixel; Video compression;
Journal_Title :
Circuits and Systems for Video Technology, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TCSVT.2002.806809